Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Uvalde parents lash out after new report clears city police of missteps during Texas school attack

- By Acacia Coronado

UVALDE, Texas —An investigat­ion Uvalde city leaders ordered into the Robb Elementary School shooting put no blame on local police officers and defended their actions Thursday, despite acknowledg­ing a series of rippling failures during the fumbled response to the 2022 classroom attack that left 19 children and two teachers dead.

Several family members of victims walked out in anger midway though a presentati­on that portrayed Uvalde Police Department appropriat­ely, in contrast to scathing and sweeping state and federal past reports that faulted police at every level.

“You said they did it in good faith. You call that good faith? They stood there 77 minutes,” said Kimberly Mata-Rubio, whose daughter was among those killed in the attack, after the presentati­on ended.

Another person in the crowd screamed, “Cowards!” Jesse Prado, an Austinbase­d investigat­or and former police detective who made the report for the Uvalde City Council, described several failures by federal officers at the scene that day: communicat­ion problems, poor training for live shooter situations, lack of available equipment and delays on breaching the classroom.

“There were problems all day long with communicat­ion and lack of it. The officers had no way of knowing what was being planned, what was being said,” Mr. Prado said. “If they would have had a ballistic shield, it would have been enough to get them to the door.”

The report is just one of several probes into the massacre. Texas lawmakers found in 2022 that nearly 400 rushed to the scene but waited more than an hour before confrontin­g the gunman. A Department of Justice report in January criticized the “cascading failures” of responding law enforcemen­t.

Law enforcemen­t took more than an hour to get inside the classroom and kill the gunman, even as children inside the classrooms called 911, begging police to rescue them.

But Mr. Prado said his review showed that officers showed “immeasurab­le strength” and “level-headed thinking” as they faced fire from the shooter and refrained from shooting into a darkened classroom.

“They were being shot at from eight feet away from the door,” Mr. Prado said.

Mr. Prado also said families who rushed to the school that day compromise­d efforts to set up a chain of command, as officers had to conduct crowd control while parents desperatel­y tried to get in the building or begged officers to go inside.

”At times they were difficult to control,” Mr. Prado said. “They were wanting to break through police barriers.”

Family members erupted when Mr. Prado briefly left after his presentati­on.

“Bring him back!” several of them shouted.

Mr. Prado returned and sat and listened when victims’ families cried and criticized the report, the council and the responding officers.

“My daughter was left for dead,” Ruben Zamorra said. “These police officers signed up to do a job. They didn’t do it.”

A criminal investigat­ion by Uvalde District Attorney Christina Mitchell’s office into the law enforcemen­t response in the May 2022 shooting remains open. A grand jury was summoned earlier this year and some law enforcemen­t officials have already been asked to testify.

The city investigat­ion report comes after a nearly 600page January report by the Department of Justice found massive failures by law enforcemen­t, including acting with “no urgency” to establish a command post, assuming the subject was barricaded despite ongoing gunfire, and communicat­ing inaccurate informatio­n to grieving families.

Attorney General Merrick Garland said the victims “deserved better,” as he presented the Justice Department’s findings to the affected families in Uvalde.

“Had law enforcemen­t agencies followed generally accepted practices in active shooter situations and gone right after the shooter and stopped him, lives would have been saved and people would have survived,” Mr. Garland said at the news conference in January.

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